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New Reduced Two-Time Step Method for Calculating Combustion and Emission Rates of Jet-A and Methane Fuel With and Without Water Injection (April 1, 2004)


Author: Molnar, Melissa; Marek, C. Joh
Subject: SOLAR SAILS; MEMBRANE STRUCTURES; GRAVITATIONAL EFFECTS; KAPTON (TRADEMARK); INFLATABLE SPACE STRUCTURES; PHOTOGRAMMETRY; FINITE ELEMENT METHOD
Year: 2004
Language: English
Book contributor: NASA
Collection: nasa_techdocs

Description

A simplified kinetic scheme for Jet-A, and methane fuels with water injection was developed to be used in numerical combustion codes, such as the National Combustor Code (NCC) or even simple FORTRAN codes that are being developed at Glenn. The two time step method is either an initial time averaged value (step one) or an instantaneous value (step two). The switch is based on the water concentration in moles/cc of 1x10(exp -20). The results presented here results in a correlation that gives the chemical kinetic time as two separate functions. This two step method is used as opposed to a one step time averaged method previously developed to determine the chemical kinetic time with increased accuracy. The first time averaged step is used at the initial times for smaller water concentrations. This gives the average chemical kinetic time as a function of initial overall fuel air ratio, initial water to fuel mass ratio, temperature, and pressure. The second instantaneous step, to be used with higher water concentrations, gives the chemical kinetic time as a function of instantaneous fuel and water mole concentration, pressure and temperature (T4). The simple correlations would then be compared to the turbulent mixing times to determine the limiting properties of the reaction. The NASA Glenn GLSENS kinetics code calculates the reaction rates and rate constants for each species in a kinetic scheme for finite kinetic rates. These reaction rates were then used to calculate the necessary chemical kinetic times. Chemical kinetic time equations for fuel, carbon monoxide and NOx were obtained for Jet-A fuel and methane with and without water injection to water mass loadings of 2/1 water to fuel. A similar correlation was also developed using data from NASA's Chemical Equilibrium Applications (CEA) code to determine the equilibrium concentrations of carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide as functions of overall equivalence ratio, water to fuel mass ratio, pressure and temperature (T3). The temperature of the gas entering the turbine (T4) was also correlated as a function of the initial combustor temperature (T3), equivalence ratio, water to fuel mass ratio, and pressure.

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Selected metadata

Identifier: nasa_techdoc_20040070781
Document-source: CASI
Documentid: 20040070781
Nasa-center: Glenn Research Center
Online-source: http://wayback.archive-it.org/1792/20100213193120/http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20040070781
Original-nasa-rights: Unclassified; Copyright (Distribution as joint owner in the copyright) ; Unlimited; Publicly available;
Report-number: AIAA Paper 2004-1579
Updated-added-to-ntrs: 2009-07-29
Licenseurl: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain/
Mediatype: texts
Rights: Public Domain
Identifier-access: http://www.archive.org/details/nasa_techdoc_20040070781
Identifier-ark: ark:/13960/t3hx2770c
Ppi: 600
Ocr: ABBYY FineReader 8.0

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